Tlangpi

Tlangpi also known as Klangpi is a mountainous village of Chin people in Thantlang Township, Chin State, Myanmar. It is located in the west of Chin State, 13 km away from the south of Camp Victoria, Headquarters of Chin National Front at India-Myanmar border. In the 2014 Myanmar Census, the population in Tlangpi was 1,648 (females: 823 and males: 825). There were 346 'conventional households' in Tlangpi in 2014.

History
In The Chin Hills Book Volume II 1896, Carey & Tuck mentioned Tlangpi as ‘Klangpi’ that had 70 houses. In contrast, in the Chin-Lushai Land Book 1893, Reid correctly spelt the village name as 'Tlangpi' that had 100 houses. In 1896, the houses in ‘Klangpi’ were built with bamboo in the manner of Lushai (Mizo) style. Approximately in 1850, the Lai people of Vanzang village established Tlangpi village which now constitutes one of the six villages in Vanzang Hill Tract.

Until 1895, Chinland (also known as Chin State or the Chin Hills) including Tlangpi was a sovereign territory with their own ruling system of chieftainship. In 1872, 1888, 1889-1890 and 1895, the British invaded Chinland for colonisation. After the 1895 invasion, the British declared that Chinland was a British Colony separately. The British legislated the Chin Hills Regulation (1896) to rule the Chin people in the Chin Hills and Lushai Hills. The British did not abolish the Chin ruling system of chieftainship. Under the Chin Hills Regulation (1896), they applied the indirect rule to Chin people through the existing Chin Chiefs.

In 1947, Mang Ling had become the Chief of Tlangpi under the Hakha sub-division of the British Colony. Tlangpi Chief was one of the 19 Chin Hills Chiefs who represented the Chin people's wish to the Frontier Areas Committee of Enquiry. The Committee was formed to unify the Frontier Areas and 'Ministerial Burma' with the Frontier Areas people's 'free consent' before the British conferred independence upon Burma in 1948.

Tlangpi has a bedrock mortar site at its northern outskirt. It is locally known as 'lungsum', literally meaning 'rock mortar'. Prehistoric peoples used this type of bedrock mortars to grind foods. Their use of bedrock mortars was world-wide from Americas to Asia.

Just a stone's throw from the site of the bedrock mortar at the northern outskirt of Tlangpi, there exists a bedrock gayal (also known as mithun) which Tlangpi villagers call 'Lungsia', literally meaning 'rock gayal'. It is unknown whether the bedrock gayal is nature-made or historically man-made.